YOU NEVER TIRE OF SOAP Because of its refreshing fra grance, absolute purity and delicate emollient skin-puri fying properties derived from Cuticura Ointment. Samples Free by Mail Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. *ook. Address ••Cuticura," Dept. 22H, Boston. MEAT CAUSE OF KIDNEY TROUBLE Take Salts to flush Kidneys if Back hurts or Bladder bothers If you must have your meat every day. eat It. but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted au thority who tells us that meat forms uric acid, which almost paralyzes the kklneys In their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery In the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue ia coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these Irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush oft the body's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar macy here; take a tablespoonful in a plass of water befor« breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids In urine, so It no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts Is inexpensive; cannot In jure, and makes a delightful effer vescent lithia-water drink. —Adv. Business Locals HEART TO HEART Have a heart to heart *alk to your prospective customers about your par ticular line of merchandise by send ing them by post a well written multi graph le'tter. They are a direct appeal to any list of patrons you wish to reach direct and we get th-in up In artistic style at a small expense. Wea ver Typewriting Company, 25 North Third street. WE HAVE REDUCED The rates of all money loans to posi tively the lowest you will find in the city and we invite all honest people who are in financial -listress, and with out bank credit, to take advantage of this interest reduction, which is lower than the lawful rates prescribed by the laws of 1913. Pennsylvania In vestment Company, 132 Walnut street LESTFR PIANOS are built in an enormous plant cover ing 20 acres, where every ecoi.omy of manufacture is practiced by highly trained artists and skilled mechanics. Buy the famous Lester pianos on the easy payment plan. H. G. Day, 1319 Derry street. ALWAYS INVITING That noon-hour luncheon that is specially prepared for the busy men of llarrisburg at the Columbus Cafe Is surely a delicious luncheon for 40 cents. The food Is nicely cooked and faultlessly served. Try one of these luncheons to-morrow noon. Hotel Co lumbus, Third and Walnut streets. BEST BOYS' BOOT Is the Bußter Brown, the shoe with out a bust. Somehow this shoe wears longer than others and are made of better leather than you will usually find in boy's shoes. The last Is foot form, comfortable and of good style as well. Prices, $2.00 to *2.75. Sold only by Edward F. Deichler, Thirteenth and Market streets. BEST ON EARTH You never used a better creamery butter In your life than our famous brand, Juniata butter, made by a but ter expert, and sold at 35 cents a pound. It has a quality that is well worth the trouble of phoning us B B. Drum, 1801-1803 N. Sixth St. ' MAKE YOUR HOME A PICTURE By making your house beautiful you rot only make It attractive but you i can give wider scope to your hospl- | tality and make your home a picture ! by having your walls papered by the Peerless Wall Paper Store. Papers, 6 cents and up. R. A. White, pro prietor, 418 North Third street. NATURE'S WARNING SIGNALS Trust your health to your physi cian. He has studied your physical being with scientific knowledge de signed to promote your health. Trust ub with the filling of your prescrip tion. Every drug or chemical in our stock Is fresh and full of strength; our clerks are competent and ex perienced. E. Z. Gross, druggist and apothecary, 119 Market street. Harrisburg Carpet Co. 32 North Second Street MONDAY EVENING, !i0 ACCOUNTS TO BE PRESENTED TO COUAT Register of Wills Danner Has Big List Ready For June Or phans' Session Half a hundred executors', suar dlans', administra tors' and trustees' accounts have been passed upon by Roy C. Danner, register of wills, and will be pre sented to June ses sions of orphans' court on Tuesday, June 16. Thirty-nine first and final accounts, | a fourth and final account, three first« accounts, two accounts, four firsts and partial accounts and a final account in various estates are among the list. The list of fifty is considerably larger than ordinary and will be the last orphans' court session prior to the'summer vacation of the Dauphin county court. To Make Pipe Connections. —Notice has been served by City Engineer M. B. Cowden upon property owners abut ting in Derry street between Twenty second and Twenty-third streets to make all the necessary water, gas, sewer and steam heat connections in cident to the paving of the street within sixty days. I Old Bridge Iron and Roller to Be Sold. —On June 2 at tho tool house at Tenth and State streets Commissioner W. H. Lynch, superintendent of streets and public improvements, will sell at public auction the old iron of the bridge above Dock street and the road roller that has been in the depart ment for some years. Realty Transfers. —Realty transfers Saturday included: W. S. Hurlock to H. B. Bair. North Second street, $1; Jacob K. Kline to E. M. Eshenour, trustee. South Hanover township, $1,400; R. A. Care, trustee, to R. A. Care, Swatara township, $1; H. C. , Hamilton to G. C. Hallman, Dau phin, sl. p At the Register's Ofliee. Letters ' were granted to-day on various estates HS follows: John W. Schreffler, former Lykens hotelkeeper, to Thomas H. Schreffler, Harrisburg; Margaret C. Bond, Derry, to William H. Bond; will r of Harriet E. Fox probated and letters ( granted to Harry K. Letterroan, New • York, and Dr. Martin L. Hershey, ) Hershey; will of Kate Cunkle prflbated s and letters granted to James R. i Downie. I Mechanics Trust Company's First 1 Appointment. The Mechanics Trust ) Company got its first court appoint , ment as a committee to-day, when it ) was made the committee to handle the I estate of Sam B. Gipe, a lunatic, who > has an estate valued at about $4,000. i Attorney W. H. Earnest made the ap , plication. s Adams Express Co. to Appeal.—An appeal t» the Superior Court from the . Dauphin court's decision on the ques t tion of the liability of the Adams Ex • press Company for the city tax on ■ horses will be taken by Charles H. Bcrgner, counsel for the company. The Daupln court decided that the express company is liable for taxes on horses hauling wagons in the city streets. The amount involved in the appeal for only one horse sll2 taxes for the years 1909, 1910, 1911 and IPI2. If the court below is sustained the company will have to pay taxes on all the horses. SUES MILLIONAIRE «*r BAHONESS URSULA BARBARA VON KALINOWSKI New York, May 25.—Nothing less than $2,500,000 can serve as balm for the injured feelings of pretty little Baroness Ursula Barbara Von Kalin owski, who is suing Michael J. Hur ley, the St. Louis paint manufacturer, for breach of promise. The Baroness declared that Hurley mp.de her follow him over two continents on the prom ise that he was going to wed her and that he then held her up to ridicule. The Baroness started proceedings after she traveled from Europe to St. Louis only to find that Hurley was not on hand to keqp his appointment to make he*- his bride. READING DEPRESSION ACUTE , Special to The Telegraph Reading, Pa., May 25.—The depres sion of several weeks in local manu facturing circles became more acute to-day with the closing down of sev eral departments of the Reading Hardware Company, throwing 500 men out of employment. In the past ten days a number of local industries have reduced the working hours and hosiery manufacturers have laid off nearly 1,000 hands. And He said unto all, If anv man would come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross dally, und follow Me.— Luke 9:23. If you knew these player-pianos they would not last till Saturday Copyright, 1912, by Stone & McCarrick, Inc. .._J WHEN we infer that these player-pianos would be sold before Saturday, if you but knew them , we do not have in mind your having a knowledge of the player-pianos themselves: That is, a knowledge of the woods and felts and strings and keys all their physical parts. But we have in mind what you can accomplish with them. If you knew the ease with which you could play these player-pianos; if you knew the real pleasure and satisfaction you would get out of one: If you knew , that seated at one of these player-pianos, you could, within a single week , get better results than the average piano student can upon a piano, after years of practice; If you knew, Mr. Business Man, that with one of these player-pianos you could get com pletely away from the grind and worries of business; If you knew that you could play all your favorite tunes; About OUT playCT If you knew that the whole world of music would be opened roll proposition j to yOU; A business man was just at the point If you knew that over eighteen thousand of the world's best 1,%' ££2"* musical compositions were available for your playing; thought of something. He asked, "What W w .1 11 . | • | i r.l will the music cost me? I suppose the you knew that you could master the musical works or the I rolls will cost about as much as the pi- I greatest composers; ano ' won,t thcy? " Hi .1 . • 1 .1 If There jtui are. This is not an ttneom you knew that in your player-piano there was solace ror I mon idea either. There are lots of per- 1 every mood and music for every occasion-we say, if these things, then there would not be a single one of these player- I rolls spell a tremendous expense on top I 1 f. 1 C . 1 of t' lc cost of the player-piano: pianos lert by Saturday. , . . . , r 1l 1 • • 1 * /"• Jlf •• • 1 we are e a dmit that, under You would bring in the rive dollar initial payment necessary I some plans and with some piano houses, I . _ . - \/ ij •. • I, player rolls run up to a very tidy item to secure one, to-morrow morning. Yes, you would sit right of expense. down now and send in the five dollars by letter, advising us to hold , But undcr this co-operative plan your r •! II *ll 1 • player roll expense need scarcely be con one ror you until you could come in and make your selection. sidered. it is almost nil—nothing. These player-pianos cannot be replaced by anything you can put To begin with, you get nine roils of 1 .1 . *ll • 11 1 .• ( music with your player-piano—your own in your home, that will give you so much pleasure and satisfaction. I selection. These you can exchange for I Dozens of persons have told us this. ot, . lcr rolls . f ,° r 5 " nts , sl Y °" . can 11. o i r i s other entirely different selec -1 hrough this co-operation Sale, you can purchase one of these tinns (y° ur choice) in exchange for 45 player-pianos at a saving of one hundred and fifty-five e ", s . , , ~ j ww \• 1 r \ These in turn can be exchanged for still dollars ! think 01 that. different selections (your choice) for 5 \/ L f .1 LJJ J * M. t' Jll cents a roll, and so on and so on, in- You can buy one tor three hundred and mnety-hve dollars definitely, in this way nine new seiec noWy while the usual price, here in this city and all over the country, tions " evcr cost you ovcr 45 cents in all is five hundred and fifty dollars. . - It will be delivered at once; just as soon as you make your obtain any T si , c in t l h . e catalogue at | • • • l f C 1 11 any time for 1 dollar a roll. selection and pay your initial payment or hve dollars. * ! Rolls that will cost you elsewhere 1 I Your regular payments are then only two d a week an"Td"nar°,St; By these easiest of easy terms you thus have 195 weeks to can be had here at the fiat price of 1 doi pay the balance of three hundred and ninety dollars, and when this "VhcTc also can be exchanged tor other amount is paid, you are through. ™ lls " 5 ""I s a roll > and these in mm rj-.. i - 1 | • i f° r others at 5 cents a roll; so you see, I here are no dues, or interest, or extras, or bonus to be paid I the music roll question is not an cxpen- I afterwards -to run the price up forty or fifty dollars more. of V m°n"ic h ron' s ,The whole plan upon which you obtain one of these player- small , fi , xed ? hai ;£ e °! , 5 . cents a roll . , . . j i I*l 1 —and the selection of this chain of rolls is pianos is big, broad and liberal. I constantly available out of a library of I You do not take a single chance. Every possible risk has adhere"'To be"found°i""w r ka. musk been eliminated. ' They are guaranteed without reserve. You can exchange within a year. Your unpaid pay ments will be cancelled in event of your death, and you have a month's time to try it in your home with the privilege of " calling the deal off" and getting your money back. With all these privileges, and liberalities and safeguards in mind, we want to ask you a fair question. Can you afford not to put one of these instruments in y©ur home in view of their infinite source of pleasure and entertainment to every member of the family ? J. H. Troup M 15 SOUTH MARKET SQUARE, HARRISBURG, PA. 15 South Hanover Street, Carlisle, Pa. C. S. FEW DRUG STORE, 205 South Union Street, Middletown, Pa. Copyright, 1912, by Stone & McCarrick, Inc. ___ ; ; ; ; ; ; RANDOLPH KEIM IS DEAD AT WASHINGTON One lime Editor of the Telegraph and Organizer of City Zouaves y By Associated Press Washington, D. C., May 25. Funeral arrangements for Randolph De Renneville Keim, aged 76, of Wash ington, anrl Reading, Pa., for some years one of the best known Washing ton correspondents, were completed here to-day. He died at a local hos HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH pltal yesterday. Burial will be In Heading to-morrow afternoon. Mr. Kelm was one of the last of the news papermen who reported battles of the Civil War. Randloph De Bennevllle Keim was well-known In Harrisburg, having been editor of the Telegraph for sev eral years. He was organizer and first commander of the Harrisburg Rifles, afterward the First City Zouaves, formed in April, 1861, directly follow ing the opening of the Civil War. That company was afterward Company A of the One Hundred and Twenty seventh Pennsylvania Volunteers. During the war he was at tbe front as a newspaper correspondent and won distinction for his reports which were published by the New York Herald and other big newspapers. He went around the world with General Grant. He was connected officially in Wash ington for many years and was also identified with the Reading Times, re siding In Reading for some time. Ho was an authority on hlstorleiU sub jects and prepared several books for the government by direction of Con gress. Mrs. Kelm, who was formerly very prominent In Daughters of the American Revolution circles, and a daughter survive. Stork Wins in Race With Double Burden Following a suggestion of President Judge Kunkel this morning, Lewis J. Brown left the courtroom with Le hanna Puller, who had him arrested, jind went directly over to the mar riage license bureau, got a license and were wedded. The marriage docket Incidentally was not without Its color scheme after the pair had left. Brown is a coal wagon driver. Both hlriself and bride are negoes. Mrs. Brown's maiden nautf was Green. The story in the case was another tale of how the stork beat Cupid to It. In this instance, however, the stork MAY 25, 1914. I was doubly generous. On February 2 an heir and an heiress came to grace the newly-established house of Brown. Lancaster Liquor Dealers' Anti-Profanity Campaign Pa., May 25. —The Lan caster county liquor dealers' associa tion has adopted an anti-profanity campaign. Cards bearing the follow ing will be displayed In all barrooms: "Do not swear nor use obscene or pro fane language." It Is the Intention of the proprietors to have the Injunction strictly obeyed. Orders have gone forth to make every effort to talte away some of the stig ma from the saloon business. CASTORIA For Infants and Chlldran. Bears tne Tl)t KM Toil Bin Alwais Bought Slgn o a f ture 7 FORMER ROME MAYOR HERB By Associated Press New York, May 25.—A delegation ot Masons, headed -by Qeorge Frelfleld, grand master of New York State, went down the bay early to-day to greet Ernest Nathan, ex-Mayor ot Rome, arriving on the steamer St&m palla. Mr. Nathan is on his way to San Francisco, where he will arrange for Italy's exhibit at the Panama- Pacific exposition. He was selected for this work by King Victor Em- Candor Is the seal of a noble mind, the ornament and pride of man, the sweetest charm of wom an, the scorn of rascals, and the rarest virtue of sociability.— Bentzel Sernau.